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Saturday, March 31, 2012

The Olgilvy museum has been uploading some of the agency's classic ads (including a beautiful, pristeen copy of the gay Guiness ad which was never aired, and which is probably the best gay commercial ever made.)

Artfully shot with the help of maverick California-based British producer Tony Kaye, the UK tabloid press widely reported the planned ad before it aired, to much scandal. Pubs and consumers were shocked that the traditional brand would air a gay ad.

Fearing greater backlash by straight consumers, the TV spot was ultimately dropped by Guinness. Later, the company tried to deny that this spot even existed.

"There was a desire by the agency and Guinness to have a certain ambiguity about it," Kaye told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. in 1997 about the ad he created. "So that when you watch the spot, you said, 'Well are these guys gay or not?' These guys are gay -- the storytelling, to me, needed him to give the other guy a little peck on the cheek."

When asked why the company would deny the existence of the ad he shot, Kaye offered, "Most of them have the vision of a dead rat. I think it was charming and it was very funny and would sell a hell of a lot of beer."

It is deeply unfortunate that the spot never aired, as it regularly gets standing ovations at live Commercial Closet screenings to gay audiences.

“I hold no public office nor am I a candidate for public office. I have not met Bishop McManus nor has he been willing to meet with me to discuss his objections. He has not consulted with my pastor to learn more about me or my faith. Yet by objecting to my appearance at Anna -Maria College, he has made a judgment about my worthiness as a Catholic,”

McManus' Diocese spokesman, Ray Delisle, explained McManus' interference by referring to an eight-year-old statement by the U.S. Conference of Bishops, in which the bishops said "Catholic institutions should not honor those who act in defiance of our fundamental moral principles." Presumably this refers to Vickie Kennedy's support of Planned Parenthood and marriage equality, now the law in Massachusetts.

This is why you can't always jump to conclusions. Yeah, Dominica is homophobic (although not nearly so much as Jamaica, to which gay North Americans should never venture) but as a photo published yesterday in Queerty shows, happy couple John Hart and Dennis Mayer, fined in court earlier this month, stepped way off the curb. Geez.(Via JMG.)

Financial documents obtained by HRC reveal that Mitt Romney donated $10,000 to the National Organization for Marriage in 2008 – essentially funding NOM’s strategy of using racial division and unfounded scare tactics to attack LGBT equality, at the same time that NOM was fighting for Prop 8 in California.

The money came via Romney’s “Free and Strong America” PAC during a time when NOM was heavily engaged in passing Proposition 8HRC reviewed copies of Romney’s Free and Strong America PAC’s filings with the Federal Election Commission – and no contribution to NOM was disclosed in those documents. The filings are available from the FEC. But, HRC did discover an Alabama-based “Free and Strong America” PAC that in 2008 does disclose the $10,000 contribution to NOM.

GOP presidential candidate Fred Karger was the first person to really look into the secretive finances and lack of adequate financial disclosure by NOM.
The best part of the video is when Gallagher attempts to explain NOM's strategy of recruiting "non-cognitive elites" (translation: beauty queens like NOM's airhead flameout Carrie Prejean and football players) and only digs herself in deeper. "Whether you're smart people like Professor Robbie George or impressive athletes like David Tyree."

AKSARBENT listened to Teri Gross' Fresh Aire interview with Paul McCartney yesterday and we really like the song McCartney was promoting better than anything he's done in years. But the video... ugh. Do a 1/2-performance 1/2-concept video and hire some actors, Sir Paul. Spend some of your vast hoard.

Cropped version of photo by Flickr User brdonovan of
Highmark Bldg. in Pittsburgh wearing a Batman
graphic last July 28th to welcome film crews in town
to film latest installment of the movie franchise.
The square marks the location of the laser projector.

Sadie Gurman of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports that Kenneth R. Melani, 58, the CEO of Highmark, Inc., has been charged with assault and defiant trespass after a fistfight with Mark Myler, the husband of the mistress he hired to work at Highmark. On Sunday, when Myler returned from the apartment she shared with Dr. Melani (he moved out after his wife busted him) to speak to her husband, Melani showed up and accused her of cheating on him with her spouse.

Oakmont Officer David Brankley quoted Dr. Melani saying "It's all about my money," in a criminal complaint... [Brankley also said] Dr. Melani agreed to have paramedics respond, because, he told the officer, "it would be a good idea if he was going to sue."

Mr. Myler, 49, who had cuts on his face and legs, was not charged.

...After the scuffle, police said, an officer overheard Dr. Melani making phone calls to attorneys in which he said "something to the effect that if police hadn't been there he would have killed the Mylers."

...Mrs. Myler discovered after living with Dr. Melani for two months that he had hired a private detective to investigate her... Officer Brankley wrote, "He asked me in an emotional voice if I had ever had a relationship that was everything to me, and I declined to discuss that with him."

...In her husband's presence, Dr. Melani called Mrs. Myler a "slut" and accused her of "a conspiracy."

A Chilean national outcry over the killing may overwhelm continued efforts by evangelical Christian groups to shut down antidiscrimination laws benefitting LGBT citizens. Elizabeth Flock of the Associated Press reports that "President Sebastián Piñera has promised that the government will not rest until a law that protects Chilean citizens against hate crimes is passed."

Robert George is the author of the "Manhattan Declaration" which exhorts signers to ignore laws which prohibit discrimination against LGBT people and which was twice rejected by Apple as an iPhone app. He is also a cofounder of the National Organization for Marriage and was appointed by House Speaker John Boehner to the U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedom, on the very day that documents unsealed by the State of Maine unleashed a storm of criticism about NOM's creepy behind-the-scenes tactics.

National Organization for Marriage President
Brian Brown at NOM/Family Leader rally to
attack gay families in Des Moines, 3/20/2012

The secretive Washington D.C. organization which has so far evaded campaign disclosure laws in Minnesota and Maine wasn't able to prevent Maine from unsealing confidential documents exposing its sinister strategy to pit gays against blacks.
Even more disgusting was how NOM, which has worked with the Iowa Family Leader to destroy perogatives of civil marriages in the state and to recall three Supreme Court Judges, actually budgeted $120,000 to locate children willing to denounce "speak" about their gay parents on camera. (Page 25 in above-linked PDF.)

Update: Antiquarium founder has passed away. Details here.
AKSARBENT drove a friend back to Missouri yesterday and on the way, stopped to book browse at an old favorite, the Antiquarium bookstore, now in Brownville (an arts community 90 minutes south of Omaha off I-29), where owner Tom Rudloff is discretely having the last laugh on Borders. For longer than three decades, The Antiquarium was Omaha's biggest, most popular used bookstore and well enough known to book lovers everywhere to have served as the bait of an Orson Welles-narrated radio ad in Young and Rubicam's "Wings of Man" radio/tv campaign for Eastern Airlines. (Scroll down to play the ad and see video of the old Antiquarium location.)
Though we scarcely thought it possible, we liked the current venue even more than the former one; the new space (in a converted school's gym) soars, but still offers alcove after alcove, cleverly supporting the catwalks and built by Al Strong (the carpenter in the portrait), who was the King, Queen and Royal Family of construction material recycling, a connoisseur extraordinaire of iridescently loud Aloha shirts and the first person to point out to us how much of a bargain Maker's Mark was when first introduced.

The Antiquarium's new Brownville location, a block south of Main on Fourth Street.

The Omaha Antiquarium wasn't only known for books. It also had a record shop, run by wickedly funny Dave Sink, a local legend in his own right. (He repeatedly insisted that what the Antiquarium really needed was a neon sign on the roof alternately flashing "QUAINT" and "BOOKSTORE.") Sink was regarded as the godfather of Omaha's indie rock scene; his shop was the hangout for musically-inclined kids in Omaha in the 90s, including Simon Joyner and Connor Oberst, who said this after Sink's recent death:

I don’t remember the first time I went to the Antiquarium or met Dave Sink. It all just kind of happened. I suppose I would have been twelve or so, just tagging along with my brothers and the older kids from the neighborhood. Whenever that was I know I could not have known then that that place would become the epicenter of discovery for my musical life (and life in general) and probably the single most sacred place of my adolescence.

(The Antiquarium record shop did not move to Brownville. It is now a separate enterprise here.)

AKSARBENT didn't leave empty-handed. We snagged a copy of Phillip Norman's SHOUT!: The Beatles in their generation, the definitive biography of the supergroup. At Amazon.com, the paperback is fetching $11.55, but we paid $4.50 plus tax — for a hardcover.
Not everything is that cheap, but you can get a discount, dear readers, just for mentioning this blog when paying! (Call the store at 402-917-1300 to verify hours, if you're driving a considerable distance.)

BELOW: a 1970s radio ad for Eastern Airlines which touted The Antiquarium as a good reason to visit Omaha. Your tour guide is the original Voice-of-God narrator, Citizen Kane director Orson Welles (whose name is misspelled in the video accompaniment.)

The National Organization for Marriage must be cackling with glee over The NOM Scandal: No One to Blame But Ourselves! Even after being busted for setting gays on blacks or vice-versa, their strategy still seems to be working, at least in the Huffington Post's nasty broadside against virtually every well-known gay blogger, written by David Kaufman, who surely must be trolling for response links to his name, which is why we won't link to either him or his Huffington Post article. Google it if you must.
Here's part of his ridiculous exaggeration (although we agree that every blogger who blamed blacks for Prop 8's passage without later correcting themselves should be ashamed.) Emphasis added by AKSARBENT, which absolutely cannot understand Kaufman's problem with Towleroad, a blog we read every day, and in which we detect as filterless an observation of black and white gays and homophobes as we can imagine a white person seeing.

Kaufman's diatribe sticks in our particular craw because no one lionized black Omaha city councilman Ben Gray for his recent repeated and successful efforts to pass LGBT legislation here in Omaha more than did Towle, who gave Gray more space and mentions in his blog than did any other national blogger, black or white or straight or gay.What supposedly racist Andy Towle is this person talking about? Exactly how did his coverage serve an alleged agenda of dishing up racially divisive posts to the gay community?

As for claims about benign neglect of n-word comments to his posts, we're surprised, given his daily output, that Towle even has time to go to the bathroom, much less examine every reaction he gets. (Towleroad has linked to and credited AKSARBENT at least a dozen times for various things, but we've never received so much as a line from Towle. For Pete's sake, if he doesn't have time to kibbitz with bloggers whose content he occasionally spotlights for his readers, why would Kaufman think he has time to microscopically sift through his feedback?)
As for Towleroad readers' "love affair" with the n-word, we'd like to see any such Towleroad comment that wasn't slapped down immediately by other commenters. Does Kaufman really think that a blog which gets more hits per day than the population of most small cities won't attract a few racists? Is that a credible excuse to say his readers have a love affair with the n-word?)

Erroneously blaming African Americans for the passage of Proposition 8, attacking our black president for his, well, blackness, denouncing the black church, demonizing black people (particularly black men), and recklessly encouraging anti-black blog sentiment have been a hallmark of leading LGBT figures ranging from David Mixner and John Aravosis to Andy Towle and Dan Savage. Meanwhile, there's Towle, who, via his blog Towleroad, frames post after post in the most racially divisive contexts possible while cynically hiding behind a veneer of impartiality. Towle's readers have a love affair with the word "nigger" -- which Towle apparently feels no need to remove from his comment feed. As for African Americans who do appear within the gay-stream (folks such as Pam Spaulding, John Amaechi, and Don Lemon), rather than add much-needed diversity, they typically parrot their Caucasian patrons while offering little context and scant criticism.

Source Too bad Rev. Ratliff doesn't have a thing to say
about NOM's race-baiting. Oh wait. He worked WITH
the NOM/Iowa Family Leader partnership!

The president of the national NAACP has spoken out on the issue, but Ratliff has said nothing. But then, he didn't distinguish himself or his chapter by loudly objecting (as did others) when the Iowa Family Leader said black children were better under slavery than they are now. AKSARBENT wonders how much this right-wing political operative gets paid to represent the supposed interests of black people in two states, when he'll be replaced with someone more in touch with the current views of the organization, and when he'll stop pretending to know the opinions of Martin Luther King on LGBT justice better than King's own wife.

Here's Ratliff helping the Iowa Family Leader and the National Organization for Marriage try to outlaw gay marriage, civil unions and domestic partnerships in Iowa, back in March of last year:

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Note: The following observation was published by the Register before the Iowa Family Leader's wealthy, but petulant partner in judicial intimidation (that would be the National Organization for Marriage) was caught up in its own paper trail of cynical scheming to provoke gay activists into calling black anti-marriage equality activists "bigots," and therefore set two Democratic constituencies against each other.

A thistle to those who gathered at the Iowa Capitol last week to push for a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage. The group says its message is about love and religious truth, but it looks more like a message of hate and intolerance. There are numerous worthy causes activists can dedicate themselves to if they are trying to make Iowa a better place to live. Trying to strip some Iowans of equal rights is not one of them. Yet some of the people involved in the anti-marriage movement seem to have made a life’s work out of discriminating against others. That goes against Iowa’s long heritage of tolerance.

“NOM’s internal documents are a cynical catalogue of contempt,” Evan Wolfson, founder and executive director of Freedom to Marry, told me, “not just for gay people, not just for people of color, but for the Golden Rule of treating others as you would want to be treated.” In a statement provided to the Human Rights Campaign, civil rights icon Julian Bond said, “NOM’s underhanded attempts to divide will not succeed if Black Americans remember their own history of discrimination. Pitting bigotry’s victims against other victims is reprehensible; the defenders of justice must stand together.”

Below: at a DC marriage equality hearing, Brian Brown of NOM is asked (at about the 3:25 mark) questions about his organization's finances and whether it is a front to funnel money from the Mormon community. In a dismissive response, Brown repeatedly claimed NOM was a victim of religious bigotry.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

On Monday, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton, the parents of slain teenager Trayvon Martin, held a news conference, and addressed reports about their son’s suspension from school, and those that have been released by the Sanford Police: “The only comment that I have right now is that they’ve killed my son and now they’re trying to kill his reputation.”

AKSARBENT thinks that even if George Zimmerman isn't charged in the killing of Martin, his reputation, such as it is, will be fricasseed. Exhibit A is below, the first of what are sure to be many more.

ESPN reports that Major League Soccer is reviewing an incident at a game last Friday in which Colin Clark, a Houston Dynamo midfielder used an epithet and an obscenity to rebuke a ball boy who didn't make a throw-in fast enough.

The National Organization for Marriage, which spent $600,000 in an Iowa partnership with Bob Vander Plaats to recall three of the state's supreme court justices, has been thumbing its nose at campaign disclosure regulations in Maine, Minnesota, and several other states with the help of Attorney James Bopp, who helped litigate the Citizens United case.
Last week NOM and Vander Plaats staged a rally in Des Moines to call attention to their ongoing campaign to ban gay marriage, civil unions and domestic partnerships in Iowa.
Yesterday Maine unsealed internal NOM communiques that were uncovered as part of Maine's investigation into NOM's finances, and the Human Rights Campaign got copies of them.
(To maintain the illusion that it is a grassroots-funded organization, NOM fights campaign disclosure regulations at every turn, but its most recent IRS Form 990 (2010) tells the real story: from its revenue that year — $9,197,742 — a whopping 69.1% came from just two undisclosed donors and 88.1% came from five undisclosed donors.)

The group also sought to identify "victims" of same-sex marriage — children raised in gay households — and in another document budgeted $120,000 to locate "children of gay parents willing to speak on camera."

To see how, according to John Aravosis, "Mormans bashed gays in Nebraska, too" go here.

From Fred Karger's website, Mormongate.com:

Who created the National Organization for Marriage?
The Mormon Church appears to have created the National Organization for Marriage (NOM) in the summer of 2007 to qualify California’s Proposition 8 for the November 2008 ballot. They set it up as a Mormon front group, exactly as they did with a very similar organization called Hawaii’s Future Today (HFT) in that state in 1995. HFT was established to pass a constitutional amendment in Hawaii to ban same-sex marriage. Sound familiar? They have now expanded NOM into seven more states, specifically to fight same-sex marriage in those states.
We are posting official Mormon Church documents on this web site, dealing with significant Mormon Church actives in Hawaii. These documents show just how the Church operates and they illuminate the replication of the strategy in California in creating NOM to qualify and pass Proposition 8.

Organizational Chart to Create National Organization for MarriageGordon B. HinckleyPresident, Mormon Church
Grand Strategist of Mormon Fight Against Same-sex Marriage

Jeffrey R. HollandQuorum of 12 Mormon Apostles, Salt Lake City, UT
Former President of Brigham Young University (BYU)
Father of Matthew HollandMatthew S. HollandBYU Professor, Salt Lake City, UT
Mormon Connection to NOM, Former Fellow of Robert P. George (2005–2006), Went to Professor George to Create NOM

According to the GLAAD website, I have held myself out as someone who purports to be an “expert on the lives of LGBT people.” Evidently (and unbeknownst to me) I have devoted my career “making life more difficult for LGBT people.” Although these extreme statements have since been scrubbed from the site, the organization continues to claim that “Bias is Not Balance.”

Bullcrap! Nothing has been "scrubbed" from the GLAAD site! Both of those claims were made in the Politico piece than ran on project launch day, and both are still there now. But saying whatever she thinks will make her look better is par for Ms. Roback Morse's course.

In the following video of Morse's rude testimony to the Rhode Island legislature, she tells so many half-truths, quarter-truths and untruths that it's no wonder YouTube comments were shut off from the get-go. Morse and her enablers certainly don't practice what they preach about shutting off debate.

ThinkProgress reports that "Imagine Better, an umbrella group of multiple fan franchises spearheaded by the Harry Potter Alliance, partnered with Oxfam to launch a campaign called 'Hunger Is Not a Game.' It’s a multi-pronged effort, but the main thrust is in support of Oxfam’s GROW campaign, which aims to make food aid more efficient by encouraging local cultivation to reduce shipping costs and waste from spoilage."

Lionsgate, the studio distributing the movie obliquely referenced is not amused. Hence the letter ending thusly:

...We have the ability to take down your sites as a violation of our trademark and other intellectual property laws. We hope that will not be necessary as this is too serious a subject.

The GOP, The Iowa Family Leader and the National Organization for Marriage will be spending several small fortunes to defeat Iowa Senate Majority Leader Mike Gronstal, of Council Bluffs. His opponent will be Republican Al Ringgenberg, who just moved into Gronstal's district last year, and apparently didn't have time to learn inconsequential details like how to correctly spell either the name of the biggest city in the district he wants to represent) or his opponent's name.

Blog Under the Golden Dome noticed last Bastille Day that Ringgenberg spelled "Council Bluffs"wrong on his website. It was corrected the next morning, but when UTGD noted the correction,
it noticed that "Gronstal" was misspelled too. By 4:07 that afternoon Gronstal's name wasalso corrected. Ringgenberg evidently outsources unpaid proofreading to the little people.

As an attorney, I strongly oppose the decision of the Iowa Supreme Court that redefined marriage under the Iowa constitution. Judges are supposed to interpret law under the constitution. Judges must not rewrite the constitution to meet a political agenda. The voters of Iowa reacted last November not because we’re bigots, but because the constitution belongs to us. I support an amendment to the Iowa constitution that restores marriage as a union of one man and one woman. Senator Gronstal, as the majority leader, blocked that constitutional amendment referendum before the voters. Voters have a right to decide how their constitution will protect marriage and the family.

AKSARBENT thinks that "as an attorney," Ringgenberg shouldn't accuse the Iowa Supreme Court of "rewriting" the Iowa constitution to meet a "political agenda" when what actually happened is that a statute was struck because it failed the equal protection test of Iowa's constitution. Every judge on the bench agreed — so much for a supposed "political agenda." Nothing in the constitution was "rewritten." Ringgenberg said judges are supposed to interpret law under the constitution. That is exactly what the Iowa Supreme Court did with the remaining marriage statutes and directed other judges to do as well. And Ringgenberg, who is supposed to be a lawyer, has a problem with this?

If "Colonel Al" is too busy pandering to fundamentalists to have bothered to read the Iowa Supreme Court decision in its entirety, would it be too much to expect him to at least take 15 minutes from his efforts to misrepresent the decision and at least skim the Cliff's Notes 6-page "executive summary" that the court provided to explain why it did what it did — assuming he's as interested in light as he seems to be in heat.

In no other Western country does religion figure so highly in society as in the United States, where “In God We Trust” appears on bank notes and “one nation under God” is part of the national Pledge of Allegiance.

Yet research over the past decade has indicated that Americans with no religious affiliations — “the nones” in sociological jargon — now make up around 15 or 16 percent of the population.

“That is more than Jews, Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists combined — and doubled,” said David Silverman, president of American Atheists, which campaigns for the civil rights of non-believers.

It's knowing that a conservative talk radio host in western Iowa felt so threatened that he had to spend 30 minutes of his program going through that testimony line by line by line. It's the reminder of the power that I have, the power that we all have to shape the narrative that describes the human condition.

Above: Zach Wahls, raised by two moms, at the GLAAD Media Awards on March 24, 2012, described the whirlwind year following his testimony to the Iowa House of Representatives against HJR6, which would have advanced a measure to ban gay marriage, civil unions and domestic partnerships in Iowa.
Although the video of his testimony eventually was viewed almost 17 million times on YouTube, Wahls wasn't able to convince the Iowa House to defeat the measure (see who voted against marriage equality here) but ultimately it went nowhere because Iowa Senate Majority Leader Mike Gronstal has vowed never to cooperate in an attempt to put the civil right of marriage to a popular vote.
Gronstal, adamant in his defense of his gay constituents, said so again in Carter Lake on March 17. For this, Gronstal has been called a "dictator" by right-wing Iowa fundamentalists. (Gronstal's smart wife, Connie, gave the accusation all the respect it deserved by fliply saying that if her husband is a dictator, she wants more shoes.)

The GOP, The Iowa Family Leader and the National Organization for Marriage will be spending several small fortunes on TV, radio ads and robocalls to defeat Mike Gronstal.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Radical right-wing billionaire David Koch began attacking Bob Kerrey in Nebraska even before he announced his candidacy. Now his puppet group, Americans for Prosperity,is spending another $105,000 to trash Kerrey educate Nebraskans about his position on Obama's health care initiative, among other things. The yellow ad at left ran on KETV Sunday night just before Kerrey's own "Step Up" ad. You can find it on YouTube but we're not going to embed it here. AKSARBENT won't give free publicity to billionaires unless their ad is unusually stupid. This one is just one dull, uninventive quarter-truth after another.

In his PR release linked to above, Brad Stevens said he wants to get emails at bstevens@afphq.org or calls at 402-310-7897 from people who want more information about the group. AKSARBENT would love to know why Americans for Prosperity is against a health care initiative which would cover millions of people who aren't now covered and save the government billions of dollars. But we won't be calling or emailing Brad about that anytime soon. Call us crazy, but we just don't think he would be that into us.

Below are Kerrey's first two ads. The New York Times said they were at Kerrey2012.com, but when AKSARBENT went there, we were shown the digital door by Kerrey's website when we declined to surrender personal information, so we got the ads another way. Politicians.

Below is some of what is bothering the Billionaire Koch brothers and Brad Stevens (bstevens@afphq.org):

Alvin McEwen and Pam Spaulding microscopically deconstruct a North Carolina ad supporting the initiative to ban gay marriage, civil unions and domestic partnerships via an amendment to the state's constitution.

The ad exploits economic and racial issues. A young man at the beginning of the ad gives the impression that if the referendum does not pass, then it will be difficult to combat poverty. And then he uses the “activist judges” talking points and that really bothers me. As an African-American man I bristle when I see another African-American using the talking points of “activist judges overturning the will of the people.” And while I am sure the man in question is reading cue cards (rather well I might add), someone should school him that if it weren’t for supposed “activist judges,” we wouldn’t have the decisions of Loving vs. Virginia (which overturned laws against interracial marriage) or Brown vs. the Board of Education (which overturned segregation laws.)

His congressional district, the fifth, was eliminated, and he's running against the wife of a former governor, Christie Vilsack, in a redrawn, more liberal fourth district, so Iowa GOP Rep. Steve has suddenly done an about-face on refusing to debate opponents. Now he has demanded SIX debates — at venues and times of his choosing, of course. He says Vilsack meets his "criteria" for a debate and wants an answer right away, due to his busy schedule of not getting any of his bills passed.
Christie Vilsack called his flip-flop "refreshing" but says it will happen only at neutral venues.

Voted to expand internet surveillance of users by forcing Internet Service Providers to retain customers' temporarily-assigned IP addresses for 12 months as well as other information

Voted for a $250,000 congressional publicity stunt/nonbinding resolution to encourage public display of "In God We Trust" and to affirm that divisive religious bumper-sticker slogan which replaced E Pluribus Unum (Out of many, one), the US' original motto

Played hookey from the House to whine at CPAC about Nancy Pelosi forcing him to use energy-saving lightbulbs in his office while the rest of Iowa's congressional delegation was on the job fighting to protect Iowa National Guard jobs

Was called an embarrassment to Iowa by the state's largest newspaper, in its 2010 endorsement of opponent Matt Campbell. The Des Moines Register added that King was "provocative, not focused on getting results for Iowans... reactive, not visionary" and added that it was time for Iowa voters to replace him

Take Vyckie Garrison, an ex-Quiverfull mother of seven who, in 2008, enrolled her six school-age children in public school after 18 years of teaching them at home. Garrison, who started the No Longer Quivering blog, says her near-constant pregnancies – which tended to result either in miscarriages or life-threatening deliveries – took a toll on her body and depleted her energy. She wasn’t able to devote enough time and energy to homeschooling to ensure a quality education for each child. And she says the lack of regulation in Nebraska, where the family lived, “allowed us to get away with some really shoddy homeschooling for a lot of years.”

“I’ll admit it,” she confesses. “Because I was so overwhelmed with my life… It was a real struggle to do the basics, so it didn’t take long for my kids to fall far behind. One of my daughters could not read at 11 years old.”

Here's how homeschool professor Michelle Duggar, mother of 19 and a political prop of Rick Santorum, dismisses overpopulation in the world.

Where I get riled up is the Duggar refusal to consider that they are using more of the earth’s resources than their fair share when they have so many descendents. Their house is bigger, requires more energy to heat and cool than if they had simply replaced themselves instead of trying to dominate their small county with future voters. They require more vehicles than the average family, more beef, more diapers, more everything.

As a parent of children who were older adoptees (6 years old average) I daresay that the Duggars would have limited the size of their family had they chosen to adopt children & try to indoctrinate them into their beliefs instead of having baby after baby after baby.

I don’t think many viewers of their show realize that this is a political movement as much or more so than a religious movement. . . breed enough conservatives and you can control some elections. Scary.

Jessica says:

“Kids look to be well taken care of to me”, taken care of by whom? Certainly not their mother. The younger kids are assigned to an older child. An older CHILD is doing the parenting that should be done by Michelle Dugger. She does not have the time to raise her own children because she has so dang many of them.They shop at thrift stores? Good for them! I still want to know how their huge home was pain for, who paid for their outrageous trip to Disney World and everywhere else they’ve gone. And to say the world’s population could fit into Jacksonville is absurd. I don’t see how she can truly believe that. Her girls are being raised to be little more than unthinking, submissive breeding stock.

Bill says:

The Mother Theresa quote is particularily evil/stupid. I’ve been to India and wish this Duggar fool had to live on the street like millions of children do there. Children are not ‘like flowers’. Flowers require no real resources to survive, Children do. Im not sure if this woman is evil or just so stupid as to be incapable of thought.

The reality of overpopulation is well documented, despite the denials of many Christers. Doubting Thomases can go here or here or here or here or here but below is a fun video which describes the problem with facts not dogma.

Here's an interview with Vyckie Garrison, (Skip the first couple minutes of blah blah):

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Red State Update's Travis and Jonathan explain Iowa GOP politics. (This was in the wake of the Iowa Straw Poll, but astute political analysis is timeless.)

Now here's a map of Iowa. See all these red counties here in the middle? All these red counties? That's what Rick Santorum won. These are the counties that are most embarrassed by their lesbian aunts. Now if you look at these green counties here, where Ron Paul came in first? Traditionally, Jackie, these are the counties with the most people who want to open a whites-only restaurant. And if you — look at these orangy yellow counties here where Mitt Romney came in first? As you can see, Jackie, these are the counties where people have just given up.

Friday, March 23, 2012

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The Lincoln Journal-Star reports that John Bruning's campaign manager, Trent Fellers, says Bruning will be "sitting should-to-shoulder with his colleagues" to derail President Obama's health care initiative.
Bob Kerrey's campaign manager called the trip "nothing but a charade and a fundraising trip," noting that Bruning has scheduled four fundraising events in three days.

"In fact, Jon Bruning will not speak one word to one Supreme Court justice during the hearings," Johnson said.

Said the Journal-Star: "Bruning was one of a dozen state attorneys general to file a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the new health care law and has been a member of the group's five-member executive committee."
Three days of oral arguments before the US Supreme Court will begin Monday.

Nebraska was 30th, with one point (one point each for having the same age of consent for both heteros and homos and for antidiscrimination legislation (Thank you Omaha) but it lost a point for "hostility of locals." Or, as we like to call it, the Jean Stothert/Franklin Thompson/Hal Daub/Dave Heineman factor.)

Iowa was 14th, with a total of 5 points (two each for antidiscrimination and equal adoption, one each for equal age of consent and marriage equality, but losing a point for "hostility of locals." Or, as we like to say, the Bob Vander Plaats/Chuck Hurley/Danny Carroll factor.)

In last place were Alabama and North Carolina, both -3. In first, New York and Massachusetts, both 8.

Nebraska's greatest novelist, Willa Sibert Cather (1873-1947) was born on Pearl Harbor Day before it was Pearl Harbor Day. H.L. Mencken, the cynic's cynic, said “No romantic novel ever written in America, by man or woman, is one half so beautiful as My Antonia.”

The Willa Cather Pioneer Memorial ridiculously denied that she was a lesbian, despite considerable evidence to the contrary.

Cather left Nebraska to live in Pittsburgh (a great city!) and, later, Greenwich Village in New York City.

A lot of people point to the Bible for reasons why gay people should not be in the church, or accepted in any way.
Homosexuality was well known in the ancient world, well before Christ was born and Jesus never said a word about homosexuality. In all of his teachings about multiple things -– he never said that gay people should be condemned. I personally think it is very fine for gay people to be married in civil ceremonies.
I draw the line, maybe arbitrarily, in requiring by law that churches must marry people. I’m a Baptist, and I believe that each congregation is autonomous and can govern its own affairs. So if a local Baptist church wants to accept gay members on an equal basis, which my church does by the way, then that is fine. If a church decides not to, then government laws shouldn’t require them to.

Maynard (Bob "Gilligan's Island" Denver) slyly flashes a nipple to the CBS eye while trying to talk his best buddy Dobie Gillis (Dwayne Hick­man) into taking off all his clothes. Whoever said 1950s television was a vast waste­land obviously didn't know where to look.